Re: [glade--]how to install glademm on RHL9



Susumu Yoshida schrieb:
Thank for your reply again.
I am really sorry that I annoy you with an unfamiliar distribution.

Not that annoying to be sure.

If your linux distribution cannot give you automatic dependancy resolution (which I clearly doubt, given that RH/fedora still has users), you should consider a decent distribution. Perhaps apt-rpm is the correct solution for you.


According to you, I installed apt-rpm and tried again but failed.

Oh, you did not fail. It gave you a decent error message:

nana:/home/susumu/SRC# apt-get install libsigc++-devel
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
libsigc++-devel is already the newest version.

Perhaps this is libsigc++-1.0 which is the old one for gtkmm1. This used to be called libsigc++ (without a version number). Or ... I heard _rumors_ that redhat/fedora had made some debatable decisions to give incompatible packages the same (but shorter) name. Perhaps sigc++ 1.2 is called libsigc++, too and you got the wrong one.

nana:/home/susumu/SRC# apt-get install gtkmm2
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have
requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable
distribution that some required packages have not yet been created
or been moved out of Incoming.

Since you only requested a single operation it is extremely likely that
the package is simply not installable and a bug report against
that package should be filed.
The following information may help to resolve the situation:

The following packages have unmet dependencies:
  gtkmm2: Depends: libsigc-1.2.so.5
E: Broken packages

See? The newest version of both libsigc++ and libsigc++-devel are
already installed on my machine but when I try to "apt-get install gtkmm2",
it says "libsigc-1.2 is UNMET".
Does it make sense?

Yes. Somewhat. It looks like you mixed packages from different incompatible sources. Or apt-rpm can not live to its expectations ;-)


You say


Shocked and glad to not _had_ to compile gtkmm myself for several years


but is it much easier to use gtkmm on Debian (which is
 your distribution,right?) ?

Debian is my distribution and while it has different issues (sometimes transitions take a long time which is mostly due to decisions of the people involved or lack of maintainer's spare time) I grew really fond of its package management.

The gnome 2.4 situation in sid (unstable) is really good. Sarge (testing) is slowly getting there and woody (stable) is hopelessly frozen.

But fedora should not be a bad choice either (from what I have heard).

   Christof




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